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Creators/Authors contains: "Benmore, Chris"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 1, 2026
  2. The atomic structure of FLiNaK and its evolution with temperature are examined with x-ray scattering and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations in the temperature range 460–636 °C. In accord with previous studies, it’s observed that the average nearest-neighbor (NN) cation-anion coordination number increases with increasing cation size, going from ∼4 for Li-F to ∼6.4 for K-F. In addition, we find that there is a coupled change in local coordination geometry – going from tetrahedral for Li-F to octahedral for Na to very disordered quasi-cuboidal for K. The varying geometry and coordination distances for the cation-anion pairs cause a relatively constant F-F next-nearest neighbor (NNN) distance of approximately 3.1 Å. This relatively fixed distance allows the F anions to assume an overall correlated structure very similar to that of a hard-sphere liquid with an extended radius which is beyond the normal F ion size but reflects the cation-anion coordination requirements. Careful consideration of the evolution of the experimental atomic distribution functions with increasing temperature shows that the changes in correlation at each distance can be understood within the context of broadening asymmetric neighbor distributions. Within the temperature range studied, the evolution of F-F correlations with increasing temperature is consistent with changes expected in a hard-sphere liquid simply due to decreasing density. 
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  3. Punzo, Francesco (Ed.)
    To enhance the solubility of orally administered pharmaceuticals, liquid capsules or amorphous tablets are often preferred over crystalline drug products. However, little is known regarding the variation in bonding mechanisms between pharmaceutical molecules in their different disordered forms. In this study, liquid and melt-quenched glassy carbamazepine have been studied using high energy X-ray diffraction and modeled using Empirical Potential Structure Refinement. The results show significant structural differences between the liquid and glassy states. The liquid shows a wide range of structures; from isolated molecules, to aromatic ring correlations and NH-O hydrogen bonding. Upon quenching from the liquid to the glass the number of hydrogen bonds per molecule increases by ~50% at the expense of a ~30% decrease in the close contact (non-bonded) carbon-carbon interactions between aromatic rings. During the cooling process, there is an increase in both singly and doubly hydrogen-bonded adjacent molecules. Although hydrogen-bonded dimers found in the crystalline states persist in the glassy state, the absence of a crystalline lattice also allows small, hydrogen-bonded NH-O trimers and tetramers to form. This proposed model for the structure of glassy carbamazepine is consistent with the results from vibrational spectroscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance. 
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  4. null (Ed.)
  5. Abstract The structure of liquid lithium pyroborate, Li4B2O5(J= Li/B = 2), has been measured over a wide temperature range by high‐energy X‐ray diffraction, and compared to that of its glass and borate liquids of other compositions. The results indicate a gradual increase in tetrahedral boron fraction from 3(1)% to 6(1)% during cooling fromT= 1271(15) to 721(8) K, consistent with the largerN4 = 10(1)% found for the glass, and literature11B nuclear magnetic resonance measurements. van't Hoff analysis based on a simple boron isomerization reaction BØ3O2⇌ BØO22–yields ΔH= 13(1) kJ mol–1and ΔS= 40(1) J mol–1 K–1for the boron coordination change from 4 to 3, which are, respectively, smaller and larger than found for singly charged isomers forJ ≤ 1. With these, we extend our model forN4(J,T), nonbridging oxygen fractionfnbr(J,T), configurational heat capacity , and entropySconf(J,T) contributions up toJ= 3. A maximum is revealed in atJ= 1, and shown semi‐quantitatively to lead to a corresponding maximum in fragility contribution, akin to that observed in the total fragilities by temperature‐modulated differential scanning calorimetry. Lithium is bound to 4.6(2) oxygen in the pyroborate liquid, with 2.7(1) bonds centered around 1.946(8) Å and 1.9(1) around 2.42(1) Å. In the glass,nLiO= 5.4(4), the increase being due to an increase in the number of short Li–O bonds. 
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